Most of this post is taken from the booklet “Our Glorious Faith and How To Lose It”
 written by Fr. Hugh Thwaites, S.J. The booklet contains different stories of how
 we can lose our faith, but this blog post will deal only with the Holy 
Rosary and how it can bring us back to our glorious faith. 
Fr. Thwaites’ words on this subject are as follows:
Without
 delay now, I want to talk about my theme. It seems to me that a 
principal cause of the loss of faith is the dropping off in the practice
 of the family rosary.
In Austria, after World War
 II, there was a complete collapse of vocations. One year, apparently, 
no one at all entered the seminaries. So the bishops held a synod, to 
find out how it could be that this had happened. The conclusion they 
reached was that the war had so disrupted family life that the 
centuries-old practice of the rosary in the home had stopped, and had 
just not started up again. <Pogi's thoughts>This is my experience, too; when I stop praying the rosary,  my faith soon collapses<end>.
<Fr. Thwaites’ words >I remember someone 
telling me of a friend of his, a great Catholic, the pillar of the 
parish, whose children had all lapsed, one after the other. They had all
 fallen away from the sacraments and from attending Mass. So I said to 
him, “I wouldn’t mind betting that your friend had been brought up to 
recite the family rosary when he was a boy, and that his children 
haven’t.” The next time I saw him, he said that this was indeed true. 
His friend had recited the family rosary at home when he was a boy, and 
when he had got married and started his own family they ll said the 
rosary. But then, one evening when they were about to start the rosary, 
one of the children switched on the television, and that was that. The 
custom of the family rosary was dropped, and in due course, they gave up
 the practice of the faith.
After this life, that 
one unrebuked action will be seen to have affected the eternity of many 
people. God sent His Mother to Fatima to tell us that we had to say the 
rosary every day. There were no other prayers She asked us to say. 
Accordingly, we should do what She asked.
A layman
 I met once who did not say his rosary told me that he read the breviary
 every day. That is fine. It is what priests have to do. It is the 
prayer of the Church. So in a way it is better than the rosary. But it 
is not what Our Lady asked for. She asked for the rosary. If a mother 
sends her child to the shop for a bottle of milk, and he comes back 
instead with ice cream, is she pleased? In a way, ice cream is better 
than milk, but it is not what she asked for.
In 
that most holy home at Nazareth, do you think that Our Lady had to ask 
for anything twice? If we want in any way to be like Jesus, we must do 
what His Mother asks. If we do not, can we expect things to go right? We
 cannot with impunity disobey the Mother of God. She knows better than 
we the dangers of this spiritual warfare. She sees more clearly than we 
do the dangers that beset us. She warns us: You must say your rosary 
every day.
If the garage mechanic warns you that 
your car needs repairing or else it will break down, surely you would 
heed that warning. If the gas gauge warns you that you need more gas, do
 you do nothing about it? And if Our Lady comes to Fatima and tells us, 
not just once but six times, that we must say the rosary every day, do 
we disregard that warning? If we do, we have only ourselves to blame 
when we find that our children have lapsed from the faith.
I
 know that Fatima is only a private revelation, but nevertheless the 
Church has endorsed it, and that makes it rash for us to disregard it. 
If the Church informs us that Our Lady really did come to Fatima and 
tell us these things, then we must hearken to her words. It really seems 
to me that those Catholics who do not take Fatima seriously and say the 
rosary every day in their homes are very akin to the Jews who laughed at
 Jeremiah. If God sends us His prophets and we do not take them 
seriously – well, we have the whole of the Old Testament to tell us what
 happens as a result. But at Fatima, God sent us, not His prophets, but 
His Immaculate Mother. So I think that the abandonment of the family 
rosary is a main reason why so many Catholics have lost the faith. It 
seems to me that the Church of the future is going to consist solely of 
those families who have been faithful to the rosary. But there will be 
vast numbers of people whose families used to be Catholic.
In
 my work of going round visiting homes, I have seen this conclusion 
borne out time and again. Homes can be transformed by starting the 
recitation of the daily rosary. I remember a woman telling me that she 
could not thank me enough for having nagged her into starting it; it had
 united her family as never before. And I remember another home where I 
called. There was a strange tension there: the children were silent and 
the wife seemed withdrawn, but the husband was willing to start the 
family rosary. When I called back again a couple of months later, the 
atmosphere was quite different. The children were chatty and the wife 
was friendly, and the husband walked down the road with me afterwards 
and said how amazing it was that the home was so much happier.
One
 reason, I think, why the daily rosary makes for a happy home, is this. 
From what some possessed people have said, and from what some of the 
saints have said, it seems certain that demons fear the rosary. It makes
 their hair stand on end, so to speak. Holy water certainly drives them 
out, but they come back again. The daily rosary drives them out and 
keeps them out. It is rather like living in an old house where there are
 mice everywhere. The only way to get rid of them is to bring cats. If 
you get a couple of cats, after a week or two there simply will not be 
any more mice. Mice fear the very smell of cats. And in a home where the
 rosary is said every day, after a time the demons realize they are 
impotent in front of Our Lady, and go elsewhere.
This
 must be one reason why, as they say, “the family that prays together 
stays together.” In that home, utterly free of evil spirits, there is an
 atmosphere one does not find outside. In a demon-infested city like 
London, where I live, such a home is an oasis of God’s grace, and people
 find a comfort and peace there which they enjoy greatly. We human 
beings are not meant to live in the company of demons, but with God and 
with the angels and saints in heaven.
So, as I see
 it, in this effort we are making to keep the faith and pass it on, the 
practice of the rosary is absolutely indispensable. Whatever else a 
person may do, even though they go to Mass every day, they still need to
 say the rosary in their home. It is the medicine our Mother has told us
 to take, to keep our faith strong and healthy.
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Prayer to Saint Joseph for the Month of October
Blog Post - October 6th
 
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